A new project aims to use the Internet of Things to let smartphone users establish nodes, providing connectivity to IoT smart devices.
Smartphones will become an integral part of blockchain technology networks, adding power to the connection of smart devices in the Internet of things (IoT) industry.
Nodle is the enterprise behind a connecting platform that encourages users to become nodes in the Internet of things technology network. Taking advantage of the increasing number of smartphones around the world, the network uses the computing level, storage and Bluetooth level of mobile Bluetooth leasing devices to expand the coverage of the Internet of things technology network.
NodleCEOMicha Anthenor Benoliel outlined the small details of the project in an interview with Cointelegraph, and Cointelegraph expects to connect to a global network of electronic devices based on Bluetooth low-energy communications on the phone. With the ability to communicate with smartphones with such connections, Nodle's network can take advantage of devices and computing levels around the world without the need to deploy additional hardware.
Smartphones operate Nodle mobile software and a connection point to widen the network, while providing network resources to perform the intelligent daily tasks referred to in the project. As a new mode of action learning (A2E) development trend, it is also rewarding for users to maintain the activity of their applications, which also enables join points to accomplish this intelligent daily task.
Nodle describes the intelligent task as similar to the intelligent contract book in the ethernet network. The key difference is that such smart contracts can interact with the real world and devices through online smartphones.
Developers can create intelligent daily tasks and deploy them to the network. They are all important to the ecosystem, because the deployment of smart daily tasks is funded by developers. Developers also include incentives to attract users to specific intelligent daily tasks.
An example of a smart task is when the user transmits to a special device or sensor in a particular location and gets the cost of successfully reaching the target. Another example is requiring smartphone users to perform a specific daily task, such as taking pictures in practice.
This concept is no different from traditional GPU or ASIC mining, where users give computing levels to the network to share benefits. This is generally energy-intensive, when the rapid consumption of less power equipment. Nodle touted that its app can consume up to 3% of the smartphone's daily battery when fully charged, allowing users to use the device normally without obvious work pressure.
The network is part of a new behavioral profit market that aims to encourage users and ecosystems to implement specific goals or behaviors. Benoliel says exorcists have two goals: to reward users while at the same time motivating the network to grow.
Nodle has previously worked with companies looking for companies that use its network to support distinctive test cases. The app is used for a service that uses smartphones connected to Nodle to identify stolen vehicles based on their Bluetooth readers.
In recent years, the Internet of things industry has also been affected by the continuous development of blockchain applications. Bosch, an engineering and technology company around the world, has taken the lead in setting up a charitable foundation that will also invest $100m in three-year projects for research and development of Web3, human intelligence and distributed computing technologies.